RT Article T1 Politics, research design, and the ‘architecture’ of criminal careers studies JF The British journal of criminology VO 61 IS 6 SP 1575 OP 1591 A1 Farrall, Stephen LA English YR 2021 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1780146906 AB Criminal careers research is one of the bedrocks—if not the bedrock—of criminology. It remains a key focal point of criminological research and has embraced ideas and theories from sociology, psychology, psychiatry and urban and community studies. Despite the widening of the landscape of what might be termed ‘the criminological enterprise’ (to include victimology, prisons research, punishment, deterrence and environmental criminology), criminal careers (now differentiated into studies of onset, persistence and desistance) remains a key plank of criminology. This article critiques the research design of longitudinal studies of criminal careers, arguing that a key explanatory factor has been consistently overlooked in criminal careers research due, in part, to the research design of such studies. In focussing on the role of politically motivated changes to economic policies and the restructuring of the industrial base this produced, I empirically relate individual offending careers to politics in ways very few have done before. The article touches upon a series of suggestions for how empirical studies of criminal careers might be improved K1 Criminal Careers K1 Political processes K1 Offending K1 Research Design K1 Missing variables DO 10.1093/bjc/azab033